Download as txt, pdf, or txt
Download as txt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2

N HUMSS8 COMMUNITY

COMPARE AND CONTRAST: The various perspectives, e.g., social sciences,


institutions, civil society, and local/grassroots level about Community.

The various perspectives social sciences, institutions, civil society, and


local/grassroots level about Community

There have been a huge increase in the development, and quality of lifestyle, than
people used to live in past few decades. If we visualize the whole developing
society, we can visualize many aspects of life, which is essential for the society
in which we live in. Having multiple aspects, we should always care each one of
them equally, so that balance is maintained.

Community concepts have always been used to link theoretical underpinnings.


Different communities progress differently. Development has been huge in the
lifestyle quality of people.
Many aspects in life can be visualized if society is seen as a whole development.
It is essential and should be implemented. Education, kindness, advancements and
staying down to earth should be balanced and equally cared for.

What is community in the perspective of social science?


Community is a broad topic within sociology, the social sciences generally, and
indeed even in the natural and physical sciences. ... First, a community is a group
of people who interact with one another, for example, as friends or neighbors.
Community is a broad topic within sociology, the social sciences generally, and
indeed even in the natural and physical sciences. This bibliography focuses
primarily on human communities, and although many different definitions have been
offered, most involve a few basic claims. First, a community is a group of people
who interact with one another, for example, as friends or neighbors. Second, this
interaction is typically viewed as occurring within a bounded geographic territory,
such as a neighborhood or city. Third, the community’s members often share common
values, beliefs, or behaviors. This bibliography includes sources for general
overviews of community, journals publishing research on community, and entries
organized under three major headings: Defining Community, Community Processes, and
Finding Other Communities. Defining Community lists works that have attempted to
define the concept of community, and to locate and characterize specific
communities. Community Processes lists works that explore the wide range of social,
political, and economic processes that take place within communities and that shape
communities as they change over time. Finding Other Communities lists works that
consider human communities that exist outside the mainstream, and that seek to
explore community as a more abstract notion that goes beyond face-to-face human
communities, including Internet-based virtual communities and communities of
nonhuman entities, such as dolphins or protein molecules.Community is a broad topic
within sociology, the social sciences generally, and indeed even in the natural and
physical sciences. This bibliography focuses primarily on human communities, and
although many different definitions have been offered, most involve a few basic
claims. First, a community is a group of people who interact with one another, for
example, as friends or neighbors. Second, this interaction is typically viewed as
occurring within a bounded geographic territory, such as a neighborhood or city.
Third, the community’s members often share common values, beliefs, or behaviors.
This bibliography includes sources for general overviews of community, journals
publishing research on community, and entries organized under three major headings:
Defining Community, Community Processes, and Finding Other Communities. Defining
Community lists works that have attempted to define the concept of community, and
to locate and characterize specific communities. Community Processes lists works
that explore the wide range of social, political, and economic processes that take
place within communities and that shape communities as they change over time.
Finding Other Communities lists works that consider human communities that exist
outside the mainstream, and that seek to explore community as a more abstract
notion that goes beyond face-to-face human communities, including Internet-based
virtual communities and communities of nonhuman entities, such as dolphins or
protein molecules.

What is a community in the perspective of an institution?


Communities are collections of actors whose membership in the collective provides
social and cultural resources that shape their action. Membership can result from a
number of factors including propinquity, interest in a common goal, or common
identity. COMMUNITY AS AN INSTITUTIONAL ORDER.

What is community in the perspective of civil society?


Community- a group of people living in the same place or having a particular
characteristic in common. Civil Society- can be understood as the "third sector" of
society, distinct from government and business, and including the family and the
private sphere. 11.

8. SOCIAL SCIENCE PERSPECTIVE (cont.) A community is a group of people whose


connections and relations are formed by their shared history, experiences,
geographies and identities. MAN SOCIALIZATION COMMUNITY developsthrough
9. INSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE Social Institutions – arise from voluntary shared
agreements among individuals that generally also shape their behaviors as
collective; perform functions of community Institutions – established rules that
ensure the regular and predictable behavior

You might also like